“It just doesn’t stop, it’s shock after shock,” Maurice Dahan, the regional head of the Israelite Central Consistory of France, said after the cemetery attack. “I don’t know how long we are going to carry on. … It makes me feel sick.”

Protesters came out in masses in Paris to protest a rise in antisemitism in France over the past few years, including two notable recent incidents. Alain Finkielkraut was shouted at and called a ‘dirty Zionist’ and 80 Jewish tombstones were vandalized.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence said Iran harbors “vile antisemitic hatreds and threats of violence,” adding that “the Iranian regime openly advocates another Holocaust, and it seeks the means to achieve it.”

Despite accusations of anti-Semitism, Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) is due to speak at a fundraising event alongside a senior charity official who has published social-media posts praising the killing of Jews.

“Austria bears shared responsibility for the Holocaust,” said President Van der Bellen. “Many Austrian citizens took part, and we bow our heads in memory of the victims in humility and respect. We admitted our shared responsibility too late and that caused problems in our relations at the beginning.”